HIV, Africa, 2001

UNAids estimates that by the end of 2001, there will be 28 Million people in
Sub-Saharan Africa living with HIV, out of a global total of 40 Million people infected. That is
8.4% of the population of the region.
3.8 million of these were infected in the last year,
mostly through heterosexualsex.
2.4 million children under 15 have the disease, 700 000 infected in the last
year. Many are born with it. Half a million are expected to die this year from it.
Over
12 million African children have been orphaned by Aids.

Average life expectance in South Africa is now 47 years. It is estimated that
without AIDS, this would be 66 years.
HIV is the most common cause of death in
South Africa across all age groups.
In the age group 15-49, i.e. sexually active adults, it accounts for 40% of all deaths.
Out of 45 million people in South Africa, an estimated 4.5 million have HIV.
In the
KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa, the HIV infection rate is conservatively
estimated at 38%.

The disease is still stigmatised. When an African dies after an unnamed illness, you can be confident that it
was AIDS.